#08.51 PST - I'm sat in row 2 in the main auditorium at San Francisco's Moscone Centre for Sun Microsystems' JavaOne event. Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz has taken the stage and has not mentioned the ...
The theme of the opening day address at JavaOne 2017 was preparing Java to be the preferred language for the new generation of developers. Mark Cavage, VP of Product Development at Oracle, spoke of ...
If you were a member of the press and a pre-registered attendee to JavaOne, you would have, in the weeks preceding the annual Java lovefest, had the dubious honor of a flood of e-mails from the public ...
The JavaOne conference, held May 6-9 in San Francisco and organized by Sun Microsystems, brought together developers from industry, education, and other markets, filling the Moscone Convention Center ...
At JavaOne, legendary rocker gets on stage to show off a new multimedia project spanning his music career. It uses Java.
Oracle hosted the JavaOne 2025 developer conference last month at its Redwood Shores campus, marking three decades since the launch of the Java programming language. The three-day event focused on ...
At the JavaOne 2017 conference, experts from such companies as Oracle to Intel gather together to discuss the latest in modern application development technology. This year's keynote is focused on the ...
Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with content, and download exclusive resources. Jinsong Yu shares deep architectural insights ...
The Java faithful will gather in San Francisco September 18 to 22 to attend the world’s largest gathering of developers who use the Java programming language. This yearly event, JavaOne, is an ...
A monthly overview of things you need to know as an architect or aspiring architect. Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with ...
For any conference that one attends, one of the difficult decisions is which presentations to attend. This is particularly problematic when there are some really interesting-sounding presentations ...